Tes Teach with Blendspace is a platform used to help plan and create digital lesson plans to share with students. Watch this short video to see how the interface works:

I decided to try it out for myself and see if the program was really that simple to use. As you’ll see in my screenshots, it likes to point at things you have never used before, making it quite user-friendly As seen below in the upper right-hand corner, it has Tips for new users too.

So I decided to try making a lesson on fractions with the search tool mentioned in the YouTube video. I really like that the program is integrated with YouTube, Dropbox and Google Drive to streamline adding parts to a lesson.

Just like the video, once you’ve found what to add, simply drag it over to the grid on the left. The same grid is where you can add text to organize the lesson, or add a quiz.

Creating quizzes is extremely straightforward too:

This is what my (very short) lesson looked like when it was all finished:

Overall, the tool seems very simple to use, but I struggle to see it working very well in a primary classroom. It would work best for an independent group of learners with frequent access to technology.

Stick Pick digitizes the traditional popsicle stick questioning trick but with a twist. You can use it just to pick names for whatever purpose you need, but if you want to take it a step further, allow Stick Pick to help you design your questions.

Once you have installed the app (available for iOS and Android on their respective app stores), you can create your class and start adding in student names. To pick a student’s name at random, just shake or tap your screen. Each student can further be categorized based on their proficiency level. The nice thing is, the app individualizes questions based on Bloom’s Taxonomy, but if you still don’t feel comfortable with the student chosen, you can simply re-shake or tap the screen.

As seen above, you can record the student’s answer as correct or incorrect right in the app and have it store your assessment data.

There is a slight cost associated with this app ($2.99 for Android or $3.99 for iOS), however all reviews from teachers say the cost is well worth it.

The Great Behaviour Game, like ClassDojo, is a behaviour management tool which engages students and gives them positive reinforcement throughout the day. The game can be left on throughout the school day while you “referee” and reward points according to student’s behaviour.

Save up to three rosters (one roster per class). Simply type a student’s name in the white box and hit enter to add them to the roster. Check the box next to their name to mark them as present. Uncheck it to remove them from the game if they are absent.

This is what the game looks like in play:

Note: “special stars” are awarded for every 10 points a student gets.

If a student is continuously misbehaving, you can put them on a “time out” by pressing and holding their name:

And if the behaviour persists, you can press and hold it again to “freeze” them. Freezing kicks them out of the game until you press and hold it again.

Although this program doesn’t have the in-app chat feature that ClassDojo has, it does create both class and individual reports for you to share with parents.

Read&Write for Google Chrome is incredibly intuitive and easy-to-use, providing personalized support to make documents, web pages and files in Google Drive more accessible. It aims to cater to differentiate for varying learning styles.

Read&Write offers a large range of tools to support reading and writing, including:

• Text-to-speech to hear any type of writing read aloud with easy-to-follow highlighting
• Text and picture dictionaries to see the meaning of words with a visual
• Speech-to-text feature to dictate words as the computer types them
• Word prediction offers suggestions for what you type next
• Highlight text in documents or on websites for summarizing and research
• Create and listen to voice notes directly inside of Google Docs
• Simplify and summarize text on web pages

All in an easy-to-use extension, accessible by clicking the little ‘rw’ puzzle piece in your Chrome bar.